Showing posts with label tudor. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tudor. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 26, 2021

Gamehole Con 2021 - Day 2 Part 1

As I said...this will be a doozy.  Like 18.5 hours of gaming, although with some minimal gaps.  I even played solitaire - not the card game, but a game by myself - for a little bit to keep the high going.  I think after writing about Tapestry, I'll break this into two sections.  I should break it into a section per game for easier reading, but if anyone is reading this they can just go find coffee in the middle.

I started the morning with Tapestry.  I didn't have a game going into the morning, although E did, so I added one of the open slots.  Easier to do on a Thursday than a weekend.  Klund is, or at least was, big on this game and makes some accessories for the pieces.  I had never played despite his enjoyment of it and the fact that I like many other Stonemaier games.  Overall...fun, although long [took almost the full three hours], but the first time through I was at a serious disadvantage against both position [physically, it was important I read the far player's cards] and a few folks who'd played before.  Trying to unpack the iconology was difficult alone and not understanding the full benefit of finishing one of the four outside tracks put me at a disadvantage.  That became an issue because I moved far along on one track immediately only to have a guy with a different civilization power use it to basically pop to where I was and then take all the advantages that I had lined up in conjunction with my civ bonuses.  In terms of overall position, I went immediately from competitive to a solid fourth and a game of catch up.


That's all part of a game, I don't begrudge that and I don't mind losing at all.  But not being able to see his civ text on the far side of the table and not knowing it via some plays meant I was immediately kneecapped.  I know I was playing the game right because my turns were very long so I was leveraging resources to make resources in ways that efficiently extended me beyond the others' earnings, but in the end I didn't finish a single track and instead tried to play a very balanced game that stealthily took me to second to last despite that I don't think anyone even expected me to be anywhere but firmly and decisively last.  It definitely felt like some of the civs were way overpowered compared to others.  Apparently there's a lot of discussion around that conjecture.


I did enjoy the fun little buildings and mini games [cover a 3x3 for a bonus, covers rows and columns for a bonus, get tech cards for a bonus] that benefited from the base size and base shape of the buildings.  Made it very tactile, although honestly I'm generally pretty happy with meeples, cubes, dice and cardboard markers.  I have these next two images out of order...me earlier in the game, me later in the game.  Vice versa.  You can see the evolvement...

..from pretty empty to a board full of buildings, big and basic.  I'll note I also didn't like my era cards [or whatever they're called - the cards that apply to the "age" you're in].  My were generally a flat "counter a treachery" [which never happened] or gain a flat 10 points.  I think one basically did me no good at all, and the alternatives wouldn't have been any better.  The others' age cards seemed to have a LOT of interaction and focus.  Just luck of the draw there.  Once it gets going, I will admit it's fast.  Everyone can almost play through their turn as fast as they can move and as players finish up, the speed for the remaining players gets even faster despite all the pieces.  I will say that its ranking on Boardgamegeek comparative to Seasons seems wrong.  That's a very minimally strategic game in comparison.  Would I play it again?  Yep, but I'd make sure I could read all the civ cards first and take a slower approach to any one lane.

A general picture of the floor at Gamehole Con on a Thursday.  It was much more crowded on the weekend.  This was definitely preferable.  

E reading the Gamehole Con participants [e.g. famous, not rank and file] program.

That stuffy butt next to E is a Blink Dog collectible.  They do one every year for Gamehole Con.  E has all of them except the rare first year Owlbear stuffy.  You can tell it makes them happy.  That is indeed a wizard in the background.  I'll post a better picture of the wizard later.

This beholder in the vendor area was impressive.  If you peruse the Instagram tag, it was probably the favorite photo opportunity.

While I was playing Tapestry, E played Letters from Whitechapel.  E said it was difficult but really fun and they caught Jack the Ripper [one of the other players..."hey honey, I got to pretend I was Jack the Ripper this long weekend.  It was exhilarating."]

Bit more E playing Whitechapel.

We moved on to Fates of Madness next.  It's a very simple RPG card game.  As in a GM-lite tells a story based on the cards while the players try to navigate the encounter cooperatively.  You can search for treasure and trade it to upgrade a few core skills, bump each other's skills, and choose to attack or wait to make an attack more effective.  It was fun, although E and I died during the boss fight.

The hit points system is easy.  You move your card along the grid...at least until you end up dead.  I did get in a lot of healing before that happened.  Our game facilitator, game designer, and story teller was legally blind so we had to tell him the specifics of our status, but he had played so often he had the cards memorized and only needed to see the fuzzy nature of the card to know what it was and what it did. It was nice in that it was stripped down to almost the very basics with a few rules for bows/etc so there wasn't a ton to learn like in Pathfinder, which I've played before [and enjoy], but is complicated. It was a bit more like Tenefyr in nature which lies somewhere between this and Pathfinder.


This was in the vendor area.  I almost bought it because I know some folks in roller derby, including a team mate and one of E's early teachers, but I [mostly] trust the boardgamegeek ratings when it comes to spend versus fun for me and in the 14000 overall range, this wasn't near anything I'd played and enjoyed before.

I think in the upsell version that was there, you might actually get paintable figures rather than semi-generic wood tokens, which was indeed tempting if they could be tailored to particular local teams.

I can't tell what Klund is playing here.  I thought it was one of the Flip City variants, but on inspection, that doesn't seem right.  Wrong colors for one, and more placards than playing cards on his table. I can't pick it out from the publisher list for Flip City, although they also make Ponzi Scheme, which Apong liked well enough to buy.  It does seem to require using a finger to maintain where you're at which seems very inefficient.

Speaking of Apong, here he is - he showed up during the day.  I'm not sure what he's playing either, but maybe it's the aforementioned Ponzi Scheme near the beginning of the game when there's not much money in play.

There was a gap during my day and nothing to add without screwing up my schedule or rushing, so I wandered over to the games library to find something to learn by myself so I could manage my time appropriately.  I've always wondered about Tudor, so I checked it out.  Good news, per the rules, as the only player, I am the one who looks most like Henry VIII.  And, for that matter, the most like any of his wives including Anne Boleyn, with or without her head.  

Amusing aside, while I was checking out the game, I asked the librarian if she had come to Gameholecon as a Star Trek ensign two years earlier.  As soon as I did the guy behind the tables perked up and started watching me. She hesitantly said "yes" and I noted her hair was a much different color so she was hard to recognize.  At this point the guy moves from side eye to a bit more direct attention and I realized I was inadvertently, but clearly, in some sort of "hitting on her" territory.  I quickly added, "I was a winner in the Martian Dice competition" and things immediately became more relaxed and he and I chatted about Martian Dice and what a good game it was for a wide variety of situations including both family and bar/brewery.


Here's my setup for Tudor.  I didn't get to play test it much before having to head to another event because most of it was either still packaged or put away incorrectly, but I got the gist of play.  Roughly, pieces have different movement capabilities depending on which room they go to, and higher value pieces facilitate those moves from the staging rooms and have two moves of their own.  The goal is to get to the top of the board and secure an office by collecting and buying favor on the way, although you can be bumped from an office.  As you play you collect rings, and rings change your movement capabilities depending on the fingers they're on in conjunction with the initial rooms and the presence of a noble.  To the best of my understanding, the color of the rings does not matter, only the fingers/positions. But I disagree.  The colors do matter because you can go with a Vikings motif instead of a Packers motif in Packers territory.

For the end of Day 2, Part 1, E and I played Honga.  It's a super light game - more of a family game - where there's a saber toothed tiger named Honga who wants to eat all your resources.  You draw cards that have hands on them in four directions [a better card if you have the most mammoths on the board] and place them so that some hands point at Honga and some point at the resource/activity you want.  You can choose NOT to point at Honga, and then he'll come eat your berries or fish.  But not you.  See...family game.  You can climb a mountain to pray - first one to the top gets the most points and the mountain climbing starts over.  Collect fish, berries, etc.  Trade fish, berries, etc, for mammoths which are basically a tier 2 resource.  Collect resource bonus cards.  And trade mammoths and resources and cards for victory points [basically inventions and achievements as a stone age tribe].


It's amusing to have a bunch of adults sitting around playing a kids' game by Haba [company known for family games].  One nice thing about it is that it facilitates talking because no one has to overthink their choices.  Lot of chatter at the table, particularly when someone purposefully chose to let the tiger eat their things to make some other move.

Wednesday, July 08, 2015

City of Sin: London And Its Vices


I finished Catharine Arnold's City of Sin: London and its Vices this morning.  Great book.  I was less interested in the more modern vices such as the Profumo Affair and Belle de Jour, and much more interested in the bulk of the book about the period between the Romans and the Victorian era.

If there's one lesson to come away with, other than learning what chucking is and that you should stay out of Gropecunt lane unless you know why you're there, it's that all the vagaries and varieties and novelty of craziness of sex never go away no matter what laws are passed and no matter how society and government change how they feel about certain acts.  Homosexuality, transexuality, prostitution: it all flourished in London for 2000 years in all its incarnations.  The only change was in whether people hid what they did, or wore their prick (or cunt, as the Brits don't mind saying a bit more frequently than u.s.) on their sleeve.

Arnold has some real sympathy for how working women (and she distinguishes them from those who don't have any other option or are children, although The Guardian believes she doesn't stress the unfortunate side sufficiently) and gay men are punished by popular opinion and politics, often for reasons that are later proven to be specious or nonexistent and are simply useful as electoral or religious talking points.  It was a topic of conversation in the convertible on the way to lunch today when I noted that John Oliver said there were 700,000 individuals in some sort of gender crossing in the U.S. at the moment.  They didn't come out of nowhere when Bruce Jenner became Caitlyn.  They are always there, always struggling against society and government and religion to be comfortable in their transgenderism.

I'm looking forward to the other two books in Catharine's trilogy on London dealing with crime and madness.

Tuesday, December 03, 2013

Tempting Job Opportunities

I almost wish I'd known what Secretary Hand was before today, because I think this job listing from the Center for Early Modern History at the U of MN looks interesting.  I came very close to doing my master's thesis on XML markup instead of dystopias, and the rest of the listing is primarily tech (CMS), management, and project management.  All skills where I exhibit at least some competence.  Except for those pesky parts about paleography. I'm embarrassed I didn't know what secretary hand was after many years as a Tudor/Stuart history major.  Particularly as I read all sorts of documents no doubt translated from secretary hand originals.  The Wikipedia article even mentions a shift during the reign of Henry VII, which is where I focused most of my studies.

There are some neat tutorials out there that didn't exist when I was a college student, like this one from The National Archives and this basic Scottish secretary hand tutorial.  I hope someone kicks themselves some day for not knowing they should have learned NodeJS to read some of what I produced.  Who am I kidding.  They'll probably hire some poor intern to decipher bad Visual Basic Secret Santa Code.

<listing>

EMMO Project Manager, Folger Shakespeare Library The Folger Shakespeare Library seeks an energetic and experienced Project Manager for a 3-year IMLS grant-funded project, Early Modern Manuscripts Online (EMMO). The PM will work closely with the Curator of Manuscripts and associated staff on the planning, implementation and assessment of EMMO, a searchable database of transcribed and digitized early modern manuscript texts. The PM will: assist in the development and implementation of workflows for the execution of project activities; maintain project and content management systems for the project; manage and monitor the grant budget; and contribute to the testing, evaluation, and improvement of the transcription and tagging environment. Working closely with two grant-funded paleographers, the PM will also participate in the creation and sustaining of a community of volunteer transcribers.

 The ideal candidate will have an advanced subject degree in early modern English literature or history and an MLS, with training in early modern English paleography preferred. This position requires project management experience, preferably in a research library or museum setting. Experience with XML and project and content management systems, such as Drupal, and the ability to work in a collaborative, flexible, and creative environment, are necessary. Strong organizational skills, budget management experience, and outstanding communication skills are required. Preference will be given to candidates with experience in crowd-sourcing, scholarly textual editing, and the transcription of manuscripts in English secretary and other early modern hands. Interested individuals should email cover letter and resume to: Folger Shakespeare Library, EOE For details about the project, see the Folger research blog, The Collation: http://collation.folger.edu/2013/11/emmo-early-modern-manuscripts-online/.

</listing>

Thursday, November 14, 2013

45

I turned 45. Not very exciting.  I confused Eryn for a moment when I told her I was halfway to 50.  She and my wife got me a very neat business card holder for my birthday with a Marvin the Martian top. I'm not sure I needed a container for business cards, but if I had to have one, that one is pretty neat.

Yesterday, while digging around on the book shelf, I pulled out my old copy of Retha Warnicke's The Rise and Fall of Anne Boleyn. I met Retha back then when I was taking classes from Stanford Lehmberg (if anything makes me feel old, Stan dying last year does - I had some wonderful years learning history from him), and she was fun to talk to - some very interesting ideas and I think not being a crusty old prof who believed in history being a particular way and no other, but a young guy who actually seemed open to new ideas probably rubbed her the right way.

 

But the amusing part of picking up the book yesterday is that when I opened it, I found my wife's birthday card to me on my 24th birthday.  This year, instead of an "I love you" I got a card about a panda who stuck my cake up his butt and my daughter signed it to the "old man".  Times change.

Sunday, January 13, 2013

Fentimans Dandelion & Burdock

This was for sale at Kowalski's today.  It was such an intriguing idea for a soda that I was compelled to give it a spin.  I'd never even seen a bottle for sale at Jim's Apple Store (the link goes to a YouTube.com video and you can see the soda shelves).  It was one of the strangest things I've ever had, although good even after a few minutes of consideration.  There are a lot of flavors mixed into that little bottle: carbonated water, pear juice, fermented ginger root (so yeast as well), dandelion infusion, burdock infusion, and aniseed.  You could taste the aniseed on the back end.

I like the description of burdock on this page.  Apparently it has a lot of different names: Lappa. Fox's Clote. Thorny Burr. Beggar's Buttons. Cockle Buttons. Love Leaves. Philanthropium. Personata. Happy Major. Clot-Bur.  Almost sounds like you're perusing kinds of acid.  Culpepper (nice tie back to Tudor history for me) says, "'The Burdock leaves are cooling and moderately drying, wherby good for old ulcers and sores.... The leaves applied to the places troubled with the shrinking in the sinews or arteries give much ease: a juice of the leaves or rather the roots themselves given to drink with old wine, doth wonderfully help the biting of any serpents- the root beaten with a little salt and laid on the place suddenly easeth the pain thereof, and helpeth those that are bit by a mad dog:..."  Wish I'd known that before the dog bit me in Wisconsin in 2011.
Fentimans had several other kinds of soda as well.  This one was interesting enough I'll have to try the others.

I found it interesting that this is basically what I was drinking, or at least half of it.